Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14
th:January 1801.
I have received your letters of the 2d:& 3d:
instts: and thank you for them— I shall
agree with Fielding for the Coachee and attend to the conveniences you
mention. I can suggest no method for your coming to this place, unless
by taking a carriage from Washington, which might be sent back by
Stage-horses. Barney, of Georgetown, would most probably contract with
you for one—1
I am so fortunate as to have no need of more bleeding, but am sensible I had need of it, when the Doctor prescribed it, as my head was very much oppressed and I found very speedy relief from the use of the lancet & three or four days fasting. I find it difficult to avoid taking cold this winter, on account of the variableness of the weather, but I have been very little in the habit of frequenting crowds & public amusements. Our crowded Courts are the most oppressive, and I avoid as much as I can remaining long at a time in them.
Your health has I fear been affected by your domestic
trouble & anxiety, and I wish you were once more safely settled at
home. With you, I agree, that the prospects and the situation of Quincy
are quite equal to those of Mount Vernon, and if your circumstances were
more abundant & more proportioned to your benevolent dispositions
than they are, I should never feel a regret that you have left-off the
service of an ungrateful Country. That a man, whose life has been
devoted to the public, who has sacrificed—fortune—ease, dignity, and comfort for the good of
his Country, should at the decline of his days meet Such a return, is
enough to sink all generous sentiment and make us look to the
money-making drone as the only candidate for the appellation of wise
& prudent. It is useless to repine however, since instead of
bettering our condition thereby, it only serves to increase the
evil.
Congress, in their
wisdom must decide the momentous question as to our future
President. I do not wish Burr to be the man, for he is without a single
pretention to the Office, except talents;
and talent is much less wanting than honesty to discharge the duties of it.
I send you at the particular request of Mr: Dennie a prospectus of the Port folio,
& the first number of a literary magazine of which he is the Editor.
In his name I am desired to make a tender of his warmest respect and
admiration. He desired also that I would enclose one 515 to Miss Smith, which I shall do
by another Post. From motives of delicacy & personal feeling, he
declines a direct address to any but his most intimate & familiar
friends. The work will receive ample & generous patronage.
With my best regards to all friends, I am / Your affectionate Son
I send love to little Susan, with whom I would gladly play old gooseberry, if I could.
RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “Mrs: A Adams / Washington”; internal address:
“Mrs: A. Adams”; endorsed: “T B A.
Janry 9 1800.”
John Holland Barney (1752–1840) owned the Columbian
Inn in Georgetown, D.C., and operated a daily stage from Georgetown to
Philadelphia (Washington, Papers, Presidential Series
,
17:294; Georgetown, D.C., Cabinet, 2
Jan.).
th:January 1801.
I have searched, in conformity to the request expressed
in your favor of the 2d: instt: all the writers upon the law of Nature and
Nations, which I have in my Office, for authorities to support & justify
& explain, the Sixth article of the Convention with France.
The extracts from Vattel in your letter are somewhat more
explicit on the particular point in question, than his masters, Puffendorf
& Grotius— the distinction drawn by him between “a treaty which prescribes & a treaty which forbids” I cannot find in the other writers;
but the case supposed of “all other things being
equal,” wherein he undertakes to shew, that “a treaty cannot
derogate from another more antient, concluded with another State, nor hinder
its effect either directly or indirectly,” is supported by his predecessors,
at least in spirit & by construction.
The sixth article of the Convention then, must be
considered as entirely nugatory and as if nothing had been done respecting
it, because says Vattel, “where there is collision, it forms an exception to
the treaty which prescribes, and that which forbids has the advantage.” Why? “Because we
have not the power of doing what another treaty forbids—” The Commercial
treaty with Britain in the 25th: article forbids our stipulating any thing inconsistent
with it, during the continuance of amity between the two Countries. The
sixth article of the french Convention, prescribes, something inconsistent with it, and consequently
cannot be carried into effect—1
But unless it were to pacify the jealousy or the pride of
the french Republic, I can see no reason why this article should have been
inserted; for if our negociators were aware of its interference with prior
existing engagements, and that by the law of Nations it would be construed
to be nugatory; there could be no use in consenting to it. But says Vattel,
“the interpretation, which should render an act nul & void, cannot be admitted,
for it is not to be presumed that persons in their right senses should
pretend to do nothing, in treating or
performing any serious act between them.”2 If it were not in the power of our
Commissioners to consent to this article as I am inclined to think it was
not—neither is it in the power of the Govt: to
ratify or fulfill it.
I believe the Senate will eventually ratify the Treaty,
with the exception of the 6th: article, and I
think the Merchants expect & hope they will. I look upon it precisely as
I did upon the treaty with Britain, as only better than war. The house of
Representatives, which called for the instructions of our first
Commissioners, in consequence of which they were published to the world,
deserve all the odium of the sufferers by Commercial spoliations, for the
want of indemnity. Indemnity is to be the subject of future negociation— How
could it be otherwise, when the french Govt knew
that our former Commissioners were not instructed to insist upon indemnity
as a sine-qua-non of negociation? The instruction was good & proper as
a Secret, but once known, it could never be
used on a future occasion between the same parties.3
I enclose three numbers of “Manlius,” who is examining
the important features of the Convention, to which he is inimical in
principle & ab initio— He has always
attributed the downfall of the federal cause to the mission to France; he
has always been openmouthed against
opposed to it and I believe, from a conviction that the measure was
calculated to divide the federal party—4 I have differed from him entirely
on the policy & the expediency of the measure, and that from the
beginning, but I will not say that I disagree as to the consequences— But I
will go so far as to say, that had I foreseen the utmost extent of the
consequences, I would not have refrained from the cause. It was time that
the party called federal should be broken up, for the materials of which it
was composed were too discordant, ever to harmonize on the subject of their
Country’s good—
The federal Constitution has never yet had a fair experiment as a system of Government; for the confidence that has buoyed it up was 517 personal to Washington & yourself— I believe it is in a fair way now, of being tried upon its own strength—
I have heard nothing further from Mr: Ingersoll and suppose he is waiting to hear what answer Mr: Jay gives and what fate attends the new
judiciary Bill. I will be careful to give you his definitive answer, in
Season— He will be at Washington in February—
I am with great attachment / Your Son
RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “The
President of the United States”; internal address: “The President—”;
endorsed: “T. B. Adams. Jan. 9. 1801 / 2d
Answer Jan. 16. 1801.” and “Ansd. 2d time Jan. 16. 1801.”
In his 2 Jan. letter to TBA (NHi:Gilder Lehrman Coll.,
on deposit), JA discussed the reception of the Convention
of 1800, writing that “those who have laboured to defeat the Negotiation
and those who have endeavoured to make it unpopular, from the beginning
will Still Strive to defeat and to disgrace the Result.” JA
believed the main point of contention would be an “apparent Collision”
between the convention and the Jay Treaty, and he requested extracts on
the “Rules for the interpretation of Treaties” from Hugo Grotius, The Rights of War and Peace, and Samuel von
Pufendorf, Of the Law of Nature and
Nations, and discussed his reading of Emmerich de Vattel, The Law of Nations.
TBA was quoting Vattel, Law of Nations, Book II, ch. 17, sects.
283, 314. Art. 6 of the convention granted the United States and France
most favored nation status, while Art. 25 of the Jay Treaty specified
that neither the United States nor Great Britain would make treaties
with other nations that would affect Anglo-American commercial
relations. Although there was informal discussion about a possible
conflict between the articles during the convention ratification
debates, Art. 6 was included in the final document (Miller, Treaties
, 2:262–263, 462; Jefferson, Papers
, 32:539–540).
The 15 July 1797 instructions to the first U.S.
commissioners to France stated that although an agreement on indemnities
for losses of U.S. merchants “is to be pressed with the greatest
earnestness, yet it is not to be insisted on as an indispensable
condition of the proposed treaty” (
Amer. State Papers,
Foreign Relations, 2:153, 154). For the publication of the
instructions, see vol. 12:493.
Charles Willing Hare, under the pseudonym Manlius,
authored nine essays in the Philadelphia American Daily Advertiser, 27, 31 Dec. 1800, 5, 7, 8, 13, 21,
24, 28 Jan. 1801, in which he criticized the Convention of 1800 as
disadvantageous to the United States. TBA told
AA later that he canceled the term “openmouthed
against” in this letter at Hare’s request (
TBA to JA, 2
Feb. 1801, below; to AA, 20 Jan., Adams Papers).